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The Taliban, The Government, And Islamic State: Who Controls What In Afghanistan?

31st May, 2020 · admin 7 Comments

Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
May 31, 2020

By Frud Bezhan

After 18 years of fighting, the Afghan war is at a deadly stalemate.

Afghanistan is divided up among government forces backed by international troops, the Taliban and its militant allies, the Islamic State (IS) extremist group, and a collection of smaller foreign terrorist groups.

The United States and the Taliban signed a landmark agreement in February aimed at “bringing peace to Afghanistan.” That deal foresees a power-sharing arrangement between the Afghan government and the Taliban, and the full withdrawal of all foreign troops.

As a Taliban delegation arrived in Kabul for talks on prisoner releases and the Afghan government and the Taliban prepare to launch direct peace talks, most of the country is fiercely contested and ravaged by violence, with warring factions pursuing a “fight and talk” strategy.

Government

The Afghan government controls the capital, Kabul, provincial capitals, major population centers, and most district centers, according to Resolute Support, the NATO-led mission in Afghanistan.

Around 30 percent of Afghanistan’s 407 districts are in government hands, the Taliban commands some 20 percent, and the rest of the country is contested, according to the Long War Journal (LWJ), a project run by the Foundation for Defense Of Democracies, a Washington-based think tank.

The LWJ’s “living map,” based mostly on media reports, is the only publicly available source that tracks district control in Afghanistan, after Resolute Support stopped assessing territorial control and enemy-initiated attacks over the past two years.

Afghan security forces have been on the defensive since NATO’s combat mission in Afghanistan ended in 2014, losing much-needed assistance with logistics, air support, and intelligence.

Resolute Support is training, advising, and assisting the 273,000-strong Afghan National Army and Afghan National Police. Additionally, the Afghan government employs around 20,000 militiamen who are part of the Afghan Local Police.

Meanwhile, a separate U.S. counterterrorism force is combating foreign terrorist groups like Al-Qaeda and the IS group and also elements of the Taliban. The United States also funds and supports special Afghan paramilitary units.

The Afghan forces have a large numerical advantage: There are an estimated 60,000 full-time Taliban militants and some 90,000 seasonal fighters.

But government forces are suffering from record casualties, high attrition, and low morale. That is widely blamed on a resurgent Taliban, ineffective leadership in the armed forces, and chronic corruption.

President Ashraf Ghani said in January 2019 that about 45,000 Afghan soldiers and policemen had been killed since he took office in September 2014 — or a staggering 849 per month. In 2018, the government stopped publicizing fatalities.

“The internationally recognized and elected government doesn’t have a monopoly on the use of force nor control over the majority of the country,” says Jonathan Schroden, a security expert with the U.S.-based nonprofit research and analysis organization CNA, who has provided assessments on the security situation in Afghanistan to the U.S. military and Congress.

The Taliban, which claims to be a government in exile, “has eroded much of the government’s control but cannot do so to the point of becoming the recognized government,” Schroden says.

The result, he says, is a “strategic stalemate.”

Government forces had been in an active defensive mode since a weeklong reduction-of-violence agreement preceding the U.S.-Taliban deal. But after two devastating terrorist attacks this month that the government blamed on the Taliban, Ghani ordered government forces to go on the offensive.

The political crisis over the disputed presidential election in September also affected the government’s military posture. There were fears of civil war after Ghani’s leading challenger, Abdullah Abdullah, threatened to form a parallel government and proclaimed himself the president, a scenario that threatened the cohesion of the security forces.

The standoff was resolved after Ghani and Abdullah signed a power-sharing deal — their second after consecutive elections — on May 17.

“The government faced serious challenges for months,” says Obaid Ali, an expert on the insurgency at the Afghanistan Analysts Network, an independent think tank in Kabul. “The government didn’t have a military strategy because the leadership was focused on the internal crisis after the presidential election’s outcome and the U.S.-Taliban talks.”

Ali says the months-long political feud sank morale and complicated logistics within the security forces.

Taliban

The Taliban controls more territory than at any time since the U.S.-led invasion in 2001 toppled the fundamentalist group from power.

The fundamentalist militant group’s leadership fled to neighboring Pakistan, where it allegedly received sanctuary, training, and arms, an accusation Islamabad has denied. From its safe havens in Pakistan, the Taliban has waged a deadly insurgency against Afghan and international troops.

The Taliban has been following what security experts call an “outside-in” strategy that was effectively employed by other insurgencies in Afghanistan, including the mujahedin who fought Soviet and Afghan government forces in the 1980s.

From its sanctuaries in Pakistan, the Taliban captured rural areas of Afghanistan and consolidated control over larger swaths of the countryside while generating recruits and resources. In recent years, the Taliban has encroached on more populated areas with the aim of isolating and then seizing them.

The militants have twice briefly seized control of the northern city of Kunduz, the country’s fifth-most populous.

“The Taliban has so far been successful in seizing and contesting ever larger swaths of rural territory, to the point where they have now almost encircled six to eight of the country’s major cities and are able to routinely sever connections via major roads,” Schroden says.

“The major thing holding the Taliban back at this point is the government’s supremacy of the air and its superior strike forces in the form of the commandos and special police units. But those units are being worn down and the Afghan Army has been slowly failing as an institution for the past five years.”

The Taliban insurgency has been a unifying cause for some smaller foreign militant groups.

Around 20 foreign militant groups are active in Afghanistan, including Pakistani extremist groups like the Pakistani Taliban, Lashkar-e Jhangvi, Lashkar-e Taiba, Jaish-e Muhammad, and Central Asian militant groups including the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU), the Islamic Jihad Union, and the East Turkestan Islamic Movement, a militant group fighting for Uyghur independence in China.

Ali says the Taliban has ties to some of these foreign militant groups. “Some of these groups operate under the Taliban umbrella,” he says. “They can’t operate in Afghanistan without the Taliban’s permission. Each of these groups has a unique relationship with the Taliban — operationally, ideologically, or economically.”

Al-Qaeda is a largely diminished force, with only several hundred fighters in Afghanistan. But it remains a crucial part of the Taliban insurgency. The two groups have been longtime partners and are co-dependent, according to experts.

According to the U.S. State Department, the “implementation of the U.S.-Taliban agreement will require extensive long-term monitoring to ensure Taliban compliance, as the group’s leadership has been reluctant to publicly break with Al-Qaeda.”

Under that deal, the Taliban committed to “preventing any group or individual, including Al-Qaeda, from using the soil of Afghanistan to threaten the security of the United States and its allies.”

A January report from the UN’s Analytical Support and Sanctions Monitoring Team stated that ties between Al-Qaeda and the Taliban “continue to be close and mutually beneficial, with Al-Qaeda supplying resources and training in exchange for protection.”

Islamic State

Afghan security forces said on May 11 that they captured the IS group’s regional leader for South Asia, Abu Omar Khorasani, in an operation in Kabul.

This was the latest in a string of recent setbacks for the group.

In April, Afghan security forces in the southern city of Kandahar captured the leader of the IS branch in Afghanistan, Abdullah Orakzai, along with several other militants.

According to the United Nations, since October 2019, over 1,400 IS fighters and affiliates have surrendered to Afghan or U.S. forces.

The U.S. military said the IS group’s stronghold in the eastern province of Nangarhar was “dismantled” in November 2019 due to U.S. air strikes, operations by Afghan forces, and fighting between the Taliban and IS militants.

The U.S. military said around 300 IS fighters and 1,000 of their family members surrendered.

The fighters and family members who did not surrender have relocated to Pakistan or the neighboring province of Kunar, a remote, mountainous region along the border with Pakistan, it added.

The U.S. military estimates that there are between 2,000 and 2,500 IS fighters active in Afghanistan.

Ali says that the IS group has bases in a few districts of Kunar Province, and they are also likely present in parts of neighboring Nuristan Province, another remote, mountainous province. But he says recent reports that IS militants were active in northern Afghanistan are “unreliable.”

“The group has lost most of the territory it held in eastern Afghanistan,” Ali says. “The recent operations against IS have severely weakened them and most have gone underground.”

But he says the recent arrests of IS fighters and leaders in major urban areas shows that there are still IS “sleeper cells” in the country.

Most IS fighters are thought to be former members of Pakistani militant groups, especially the Pakistani Taliban.

“There are a smaller number of Afghans, Central Asians, and even fewer from other regional countries,” Ali adds.

Copyright (c) 2020. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave NW, Ste 400, Washington DC 20036.
Posted in Al-Qaeda, Anti-Government Militants, ISIS/DAESH, NATO-Afghanistan, Pakistan-Afghanistan Relations, Peace Talks, Political News, Security, Taliban, US-Afghanistan Relations | Tags: Ashraf Ghani Government, Pakistan takeover of Afghanistan via Taliban |
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7 thoughts on “The Taliban, The Government, And Islamic State: Who Controls What In Afghanistan?”

  1. Samarqandi says:
    June 1, 2020 at 2:21 pm

    This
    *Goofy Ass
    is
    not
    from
    Afghanistan- please; look
    at
    his
    severely-biased previous
    statements and articles .
    .
    He is
    clearly
    feeding off
    foreign intelligence agencies which
    are
    actively undermining the
    unity and integrity
    of
    the
    oppressed people
    of
    Afghanistan.
    .
    The, overall, ground situation is
    very fluid;!unpredictable and totally manipulated, ((from all sides)),
    by
    international war criminals ((IWC)),
    in an order to deprive the
    great people
    of
    Afghanistan from
    a
    normal life.
    ===
    ==
    =
    The
    international war criminal ((IWC)),
    under their overt and covert
    operations)). know exactly
    what is going on killing fields all across Afghanistan; but, they will keep you
    in
    the dark in an order
    to be able to continue
    implementing their own
    evil designs
    .
    ====================•===========
    ================================
    .
    WE ASK
    ISLAMIC COUNTRIES
    AND
    THE
    WHOLE CIVILIZED WORLD
    TO
    STOP
    THE
    IMPOSED ATROCITIES.
    •

  2. Samarqandi says:
    June 1, 2020 at 2:24 pm

    *TURKEY AND *IRAN
    ===============
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    HOLD
    THE
    “ KEY”
    to
    PEACE
    IN
    AFGHANISTAN
    •———————•
    •———————•
    *YES !
    ••••••••
    Believe it or not- it won’t matter either, if
    *you
    like it or not !
    ==============
    ==============
    Turkey and Iran
    together,
    have
    the
    *real key
    to be able to
    initiate
    a
    viable peace process
    for
    Afghanistan-
    *************
    BEYOND THE SHADOW
    OF
    ANY
    DOUBT !
    ================
    ===========
    =====
    HERE
    ARE THE
    PROOFS !!!!!
    ================================
    ================================
    —————-
    —————-
    —————-
    GENERAL FACTS
    ============
    ============
    .
    Turkey :>—
    ((with a population
    of
    over 83 millions))
    .
    is
    still,
    ((directly and/or indirectly))
    heavily manipulated,
    by
    the
    political games and displays
    of
    the
    Western World.
    .

    Turkey have had
    close diplomatic ties, with the west, especially, since the era
    of
    the
    Westernized
    Atta Turk. As a later
    NATO member
    it was obligated
    to join the
    Western alliance
    by
    taking
    a nominal but, surely, an active
    role
    in
    Western
    military invasion
    of
    Afghanistan.
    .
    Turkey is host
    to
    many
    important
    Western military bases
    and
    most
    Turkish
    generals, are
    educated and trained
    in
    the
    West.
    .
    —————————————
    —————————————
    —————————————
    Iran :>—
    ((with a population
    of
    over 83 millions))
    .
    Iran, ((which has a long
    and
    closely interactive
    case history with
    the
    Western World)),
    is
    highly dependent
    on
    oil revenues
    and
    easy access
    to
    global markets
    for its
    urgently-needed
    domestic consumptions and exports.
    .
    Tight embargoes and other forms
    of
    restrictions could easily disrupt
    normal lives
    for
    the
    ordinary local folks
    inside
    Iran. That is how the
    Anglo/US allies, pull it all
    against
    Iran
    on
    their up and down
    diplomatic interactions nowadays- which,
    of coarse,
    turns it always
    flaky and unpredictable.

    Iran, as a strategic
    Middle Eastern country,
    carries
    considerable weights
    in
    politics
    of
    the
    region and even beyond.

    —————————————
    —————————————
    —————————————
    —————————————
    —————————————

    ARGUMENTS :
    ******************
    *********
    *****
    —————————————
    There are more than
    450 million
    Muslims
    living
    in and around
    Afghanistan; including nearby Turkey.
    ===========================
    .,,,.Pakistan; more than 200 millions
    …..Afghanistan; about…40 millions
    …..Central Asia about….80 millions
    …..Iran; more than………,83 millions
    …,,Turkey; more than……83 millions;
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    -which
    all
    adds up to almost
    half
    a
    billion- more than the combined population
    of
    the
    US and Britain..

    We all know that the Islamic leaders
    of
    Central Asia would never be able
    to
    help
    initiate any independent
    “peace initiative”
    on
    their own without the
    Russian’s
    approval- by the same toke,
    it
    is
    well-known that Pakistani
    politicians and field generals
    are all
    serving the exclusive nterests
    of
    their
    Anglo/US overlords
    =============
    =============

    We
    can only
    appeal directly
    to
    people of Pakistan and Central Asia
    to
    stand by the people
    of
    Afghanistan in regards
    to
    any facilitation
    in getting
    help
    to be able to initiate any
    civilized peace process that will bring
    honor, peace and harmony
    to
    all the oppressed people
    of
    the region.
    ========
    ========
    ========
    logically though;
    Turkey and Iran
    are the only
    Islamic countries
    that could be functional as an integral part
    of
    the equation that would
    be able
    to,
    somehow, launch dialogues and persuade
    the
    Western
    military and political leaderships
    to
    stop savage continuation
    of
    aggressive policies
    and
    seek honorable and impartial ways
    to
    seeks for find
    a
    workable route
    for the
    restoration
    of
    a
    normal and civilized
    environment
    in
    Afghanistan.
    •
    It is all obvious
    that
    the
    Western military and political
    megalomaniacs are
    still heavily
    counting
    and
    relying
    on
    a
    unilateral war of attrition that, some how someday hopefully would magically
    deliver them
    to
    the verge
    a; so called,
    “hypothetically unconditional victory”.
    .
    It is a case history which has always worked out
    aa
    a
    last
    resort
    by
    the
    Western intense
    International
    “political and military involvements”
    in
    various hot spots around the globe.
    which, ironically, had always been
    aggressively and relentlessly
    backed up
    and
    played out; specially,
    at
    their final
    stages- obviously; all
    on
    expense of the local
    innocent lives during various modern
    times since the Second World War- Afghanistan
    is
    no exception
    to
    “the rule” !
    ===============================
    ===============================
    .
    Turkish and Iranian
    unified and impartial stand
    would definitely be the only way
    to
    encourage the
    Western
    military and political leaders to
    formulate
    a
    realistic
    “peace plan”.

    It could really happen, if those two
    populous Islamic countries
    resolve their irrelevant
    historic difference
    and
    voice
    their sincere concerns
    as one unified Islamic front.

    We don’t want
    to
    see similar
    naive approaches, by taking sides with the artificially Western-created
    fanatic combatant
    that led
    to
    destruction
    of
    “Great Syria”.

    The foreign-imposed fanatics were used
    to ignite
    the
    warfares and then
    Turkey and Iran
    were forced
    to
    actively take side
    that then
    led
    to
    further
    destruction and division
    of
    proud ancient Syria.
    ===================
    ===================
    ===================

    To
    make it short; we
    ask
    all the
    honorable
    Muslim people
    of
    Great
    *Turkey and *Iran
    ==================
    “DIRECTly”
    to
    encourage their
    governments
    to
    unify under one
    “impartial umbrella”
    for
    the sake
    of
    restoration
    of
    a viable peaceful environment
    for all
    the
    people
    of
    Afghanistan.
    •

  3. Samarqandi says:
    June 1, 2020 at 2:29 pm

    *YOU ALL:
    ************
    *******
    *****
    ***
    *
    *JUST
    PACK UP AND LEAVE
    AFGHANISTAN !
    •

  4. Samarqandi says:
    June 1, 2020 at 10:07 pm

    This man ((Frud)$
    is
    The absolutely obsessed with
    the
    over all condition
    of
    the Islamic State.
    in
    Afghanistan- what for ?????
    ===
    ==
    =
    And any more
    of
    State-sponsored
    terror cells
    and
    lone wolves,
    •

    •

  5. Samarqand says:
    June 1, 2020 at 10:12 pm

    *ONLY
    PEACE AND RESPECT
    WILL
    EVENTUALLY
    SAVE
    *£!AFGHANISTAN!
    •

  6. Samarqand says:
    June 2, 2020 at 1:22 pm

    ONLY AND ONLY
    =============
    ***********
    ~~~
    *PRACE ANF *RESPECT
    ……,
    COULD USHER
    IN
    *PEACE AND *PROSPERITY
    IN
    AFGHANISTAN.
    •

  7. Samarqand says:
    June 2, 2020 at 1:26 pm

    Sorry !
    ====
    Meant to say:
    ——-
    *UNITY AND *PROSPERITY
    ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
    •

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